I read on Networkworld.com that “hackers have been exploiting a bug in Windows ‘shortcut’ files, the placeholders typically dropped on the desktop or into the Start menu to represent links to actual files or programs.”

Also in the article, Dave Forstrom, one of the directors in Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing group, said:

“In the wild, this vulnerability has been found operating in conjunction with the Stuxnet malware.”

If you’re unfamiliar with Stuxnet, it’s a “clan of malware that includes a Trojan horse that downloads further attack code, including a rootkit that hides evidence of the attack.”

Siemens, according to this Computerworld article, sees this virus as “new and highly sophisticated“, and in the same article there’s a disturbing quote from a large utility IT professional:

“This has all the hallmarks of weaponized software, probably for espionage,” said Jake Brodsky, who asked that his company not be identified because he was not authorized to speak on its behalf.

In the end, I think that Chester Wisniewski, senior security advisor at Sophos, is right on when he perfectly summed up the virus with one word. He simply called the threat “nasty“.